Hi, friends! Welcome to Installer No. 77, your guide to the best and Verge-iest stuff in the world. (If youโre new here, welcome, donโt forget to make your Venmo private, and also you can read all the old editions at the Installer homepage.)
This week, Iโve been reading about RISC and Ben Affleck and Googleโs new search boss, installing a SodaStream because my can situation is getting out of control, binge-watching How I Met Your Mother along with the new rewatch pod, watching Dead Talents Society after my colleagues raved about it, reliving a decade of great music through one Benny Blanco interview, enjoying a huge uptick in new friends on Signal, and doing a lot of retro racing in New Star GP.
I also have for you a terrific new Apple TV Plus show, a deep dive into fax machines, the internetโs favorite new AI plaything, and much more. Kind of a light week this week, honestly, but still lots to dig into. Letโs do it.
(As always, the best part of Installer is your ideas and tips. What do you want to know more about? What awesome tricks do you know that everyone else should? What app should everyone be using? Tell me everything: installer@theverge.com. And if you know someone else who might enjoy Installer, tell them to subscribe here.)
- The Studio. Iโve been excited for this show โ a comedy with Seth Rogen as a Hollywood exec who wants to make cool things but also doesnโt want to get fired โ since I saw the first trailer. The first episode is excellent, and the reviews have been glowing. All the numbers say nobody watches Apple TV Plus, but it keeps having great stuff.
- Images in ChatGPT. This feature has made the internet super weird all week. Iโve seen and made some really cool, beautiful stuff, and also horrors I hoped to never encounter. This feels like a step beyond any image generation stuff Iโve seen before.
- The Twelve South AirFly Pro 2. This is one of those accessories that shouldnโt need to exist, but Iโm glad it does โ a dongle for connecting Bluetooth headphones to seat-back screens, old-school audio systems, and more. The new model has better sound and faster pairing, which almost makes the $59.99 price tag tolerable.
- โBeyond โIโm Backโ: How the Fax Machine Sent Sports to the Future.โ This is a really fun blast from the past about how fax machines intersected with some of the biggest moments in the history of sports, and how a now-quaint technology was, for so many years, a huge leap forward. The nostalgia is off the charts.
- Vivaldi. An excellent browser with a great new feature: a built-in VPN courtesy of Proton. Itโs never super difficult to get a VPN, but baking this in for free and as part of your browser account makes things easy. One to keep installed, even if itโs not your daily driver.
- Paul American. I cannot, in good conscience, tell you itโs a good idea to watch an eight-episode Max documentary about the Paul brothers that almost seems like a parody of itself. All I can tell you is that I will watch every single second of it.
- Side Quest. Now this I can happily recommend! Mythic Quest is one of my favorite comedies (another win for Apple TV Plus, somehow) and has always been at its best doing one-off bottle episodes. This is just that, but even more, and takes place in part inside the world of the games weโve been hearing about all these episodes.
- Atomfall. A postapocalyptic survival game set in some extremely British locales, with a big world and a big story? I donโt always love a wander-around game, but this sounds like my kind of wandering.
Marina Galperina joined The Verge a few weeks ago as a senior tech editor and immediately started asking extremely fun questions. Questions like, โshouldnโt we do a thing about bird flu?โ And โdid you know that I once sold a Vine at an art fair?โ (And โDavid, why are all your sentences so bad?โ) What Iโm saying is, she fit right in.
Marinaโs been covering tech and science for a while, but I wasnโt sure if she was a true gadget-head or not. So I asked Marina to share her homescreen with us, to see if I could figure it out. Here it is, plus some info on the apps she uses and why:
The phone: iPhone 14 Pro. The screen is kind of crushed, but generally, itโs a fine device and actually fits in my hand!
The wallpaper: Itโs a Gothko! Mark Rothkoโs Untitled (Black on Gray) that I saw at the Guggenheim years ago. It took me a minute to find the real one online, because before, I used to have to only worry about images of โRothko-styleโ copycat prints, and now itโs all this AI garbage stinking up search results. I wanted that specific black on gray thing.
The apps: Way of Life, Photos, Apple Notes, Messenger, Google Sheets, Camera, Signal, Clock, Momence, Apple Fitness, Expense, Google Maps, Slack, YouTube, WhatsApp, Hue, Pocket, Chase, Bluesky, Messages, Phone, Safari, Gmail.
Clearly, Iโm really into gamified fitness right now. The Vergeโs Victoria Song turned me onto both Apple Fitness and Ladder, and Iโm sort of oscillating between the two. I only still have Twitter as an occupational hazard. Otherwise it would be gone. The best (only good?) social network is Letterboxd.
Way of Life โ I should explain that one, because it sounds like a cult manual. Itโs just a very simple habit tracker that doesnโt just count multiple streaks but generates handy little graphs and charts to visualize your W v. L day ratios. Gamify everything.
I also asked Marina to share a few things sheโs into right now. Hereโs what she sent back:
- I enjoyed reading Acts of Desperation recently, by Megan Nolan โ a good book about a bad relationship.
- Iโm still thinking about Companion even though I gave it only three stars on Letterboxd, but a solid three stars. More of an extended metaphor than a believable sci-fi flick, but satisfying.
- I havenโt actually gamed much lately since I started this job, and Iโm holding out for Silksong. Previously, I actually printed out a map of Hollow Knight on four sheets of paper taped together and crossed off the bosses as I beat them, which is kind of weird. Iโm a completionist. Iโll play, like, one game at a time, but to death.
Hereโs what the Installer community is into this week. I want to know what youโre into right now as well! Email installer@theverge.com or message me on Signal โ @davidpierce.11 โ with your recommendations for anything and everything, and weโll feature some of our favorites here every week. For more great recommendations, check out the replies to this post on Bluesky and this post on Threads.
โAs Formula 1 season begins, itโs worth mentioning that the best way of following the sport live or through replays for true F1 fans is by using the incredibly cool MultiViewer app. It enables you to use multiple streams and get live timing and tons of other data in real time. An F1 T V subscription is needed, and it also works for IndyCar, NASCAR and WEC.โ โ David
โThis week, I discovered GetInvoice, a tool that extracts invoices and receipts from your emails and web portals. Has saved our company a huge amount of time for tax season.โ โ Miki
โAmazonโs lockdown of book downloads convinced me to download all my books from various services and put them on a self-hosted server, accessible from my Kobo. So thanks for the nudge, Bezos!โ โ Dan
โI wanted to recommend Lunatask, which might be the ultimate platform for life tracking. It works cross platform, and it is end-to-end encrypted. It has already replaced Todoist for me, but thatโs not all: it also has a Notes tab, which can be connected to your calendar or tasks. It has a journaling space, a mood tracker, a habit tracker, and a relationships tracker (you can get reminders to reach out to your friends to maintain your real-life connections).โ โ Matin
โWatched Khakee: The Bengal Chapter (available on Netflix) this week. Very good.โ โ Rahul
โI started using the iOS Journal app and reflecting on my day every day. I donโt write, like, an actual diary, but more looking back at the day to see how productive I am or if I did everything from my to-do list. So far, it helps a lot!โ โ Colin
โAmong the many subscription-based meditation apps, thereโs this lesser-known Healthy Minds Program, made by actual scientists and pretty customizable. You can pick your own meditation time for any specific lesson, for example. And itโs completely free.โ โ Liviu
โBeen diving into โnewโ Game Boy games after getting a ModRetro Chromatic. Besides the official games (my favorites are Dragonyhm and Hermano so far), there are a ton of polished games on itch.io and from other publishers. I had no idea.โ โ Justin
โI started using Runna to train for a local marathon and was impressed with its commitment to training plans. It gives off a far more serious vibe than Runkeeper (my previous favorite) or the Nike Run app, but it comes with a serious price tag. So far, Iโm digging it โ but skeptical itโs worth the $.โ โ Tyler
I talk a lot in this newsletter about some of the things I care too much about. Note-taking apps, for one. Bad shows and movies about cool spies, to name another. But thereโs one I donโt talk about much here, and that is my deep and abiding obsession with snacks. Like, Iโm the guy who combs the blogs looking for the best finds at Trader Joeโs (Unexpected Cheddar Cheese Spread and the Elote Corn Chip Dippers, youโre welcome), and who will happily try any weird variety of Goldfish or Oreo just in case itโs amazing.
I say this because, one, I want you to send me snack recommendations, and two, I discovered Cabel Sasserโs annual snack roundups and, through them, have both found a ton of good snacks and a new love for snack-related content. Maybe Installer will one day just be about snacks. Or maybe Iโm just hungry. Either way, Iโm here for all of the internetโs snack content.


